is a designer working at the intersection of technology and social practice.

Thank you for your interest!

I design and make things that are socially thoughtful and thoughtfully social. My primary media are coding (javascript, python, Processing), graphic design, interactivity, data, and social practice (the place where culture, behavior, and interaction design meet).

National Park Service

rebranding & signage, 2015

history & aesthetic branding

The US National Park Service brochures, with their strong black frame across the top and the unigrid layout inside, were designed by Massimo Vignelli in 1977. Vignelli's work for the NPS is something of a gold standard in design history and the brochures are a casual collectable for national park enthusiasts.

I particularly like the black blocking motif for the way it frames and centers the product, which is the landscape itself. The National Park Service's recent rebrand is below, done for the centennial.

The campagin's simplified graphics, brighter colors, and tagline, 'find your park', seem to be aiming for a local and friendly vibe, probably to increase attendance at smaller parks. I think this is an error, however. The US national parks represent one of the most ambitious public works and environmental conservation programs in world history, and some of the most (accessible) epic landscapes. Minimizing them is a waste.

That said, these lands came to the American public at the expense of Native Americans. My primary design objective for this exercise was to step away from the sort of aesthetics empitomized by the sign below. Not only is this type of racist caricaturization and aestheticization both cruel and terribly gauche in light of the history of the NPS, but the country is changing. At this cultural moment it's just bad branding practice.

solution

old ➳ new

signage

This form comes from the Vignelli work, but it is also an architectural homage to a vernacular design style of ranch gates common to the American West. The photos below are collected from google images.

A Texan acquaintance told me these gates are a bit old-fashioned, and often found on the really big ranches. 'A little point of entry that you know leads to something spectacular.'